Looking Good Dead
frequency. ‘Where are you, Tom?’
‘I don’t want to tell you.’
‘OK. You’re not at home?’
‘No, it’s not safe to talk in my house – it’s bugged.’
‘Do you want to meet me somewhere?’
‘Yes. No. Yes – I mean – I need you to help me.’
‘That’s what I’m here to do.’
‘How do I know I can trust you? That it will be confidential?’
Branson frowned at the question. ‘What assurance would make you feel comfortable?’
There was a long silence.
‘Hello? Mr Bryce, Tom, are you still there?’
‘Yes.’ His voice sounded faint.
‘Did you hear my question?’
‘I don’t know if I – if I should. I don’t think I can take the risk.’
The phone went dead.
Glenn Branson dialled the number on the display, and it went straight to voicemail. He left a message saying he had called back, then waited a couple of minutes, wide awake, his brain racing, wishing Ari would be more understanding. Yeah, it was tough, but it would just be nice if she showed a little more sympathy. He shrugged. What the hell. Maybe he should read that book she’d bought him for Christmas, Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus . She’d told him it might help him understand how a woman felt. But he doubted he ever truly would understand what women wanted. Men and women didn’t come from different planets; they came from different universes .
He dialled Bryce’s mobile number again. It still went straight to voicemail. Next he dialled the man’s home number, feeling a sudden deep dread that he could not define.
‘Gone?’ Roy Grace said, standing next to Branson in the hallway of Tom Bryce’s house at ten past two in the morning, staring in bemused fury at the young family liaison officer. ‘What do you mean, he’s fucking gone ?’
‘I went up to see if he was all right, and he wasn’t there.’
‘Tom Bryce, his four-year-old daughter and his seven-year-old son leave the house and you didn’t bloody notice?’
‘I, uh . . .’ Chris Willingham said helplessly.
‘You fucking fell asleep on the job, didn’t you?’
‘No, I . . .’
Grace, chewing gum to mask the alcohol on his breath, glared at the young officer. ‘You were meant to be looking after them. And keeping an eye on him as the prime fucking suspect. You let them walk out on you?’
The FLO talked both detectives through all that had happened in the past few hours, in particular the email Tom Bryce claimed to have received and which had vanished from his computer.
Grace had come straight from the Royal Sussex County Hospital, where the young Detective Constable he had such high hopes for, Emma-Jane Boutwood, was on life support and about to be taken into theatre. He’d had the grim job of phoning her parents and breaking the news to them that their daughter was not expected to live.
He had dragged himself away from Cleo reluctantly and on a high, but after finding out the full scale of E-J’s injuries, all memories of his time tonight with Cleo had been erased – at least temporarily – and he was now feeling very low, and desperately concerned for Emma-Jane.
The driver of the van, as yet unidentified, was still unconscious and in the intensive care unit at the same hospital. Grace had ordered a twenty-four-hour police guard on his bed, and left instructions with the constable who had turned up that, the moment the man regained consciousness, he was to be arrested for the attempted murder of a police officer. Grace could only hope they wouldn’t have to upgrade the charge to murder.
Meanwhile DC Nick Nicholl was waiting for him back at the Incident Room with a laptop computer he wanted Grace to see, and dodgy Mr Tom Bryce had done a moonlight flit with his two kids – just what was that all about?
And the week was just over two hours old.
Turning to Branson he said, ‘This phone call Bryce made to you – you said he sounded strange. Scared?’
‘Well scared,’ Branson confirmed.
Grace thought for a moment. ‘Did you get him to fill out a missing persons report form for his wife yesterday?’
Branson nodded.
‘You filed it?’
‘Yes.’
‘Phone Nick – he’s at the Incident Room now. Ask him to look it up. It’ll have the addresses of Mrs Bryce’s close relatives and friends. A frightened man is not going to drive far with two small children in the middle of the night. Have you put out a description of the car?’
Both Chris Willingham and Glenn Branson stared at him blankly. It
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